On Tuesday, The Daily Telegraph reported:
“Riot-swept Britain is tasting the “bitter fruit” of its failure to introduce Chinese-style controls on social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook, Chinese state media crowed on Tuesday, while raising questions over whether London could be trusted to stage a safe 2012 Olympic Games.”
Your humble Blog Goliard was inclined to play this for laughs, until he saw the latest report from the emergency session of the House of Commons:
The government is exploring whether to turn off social networks or stop people texting during times of social unrest.
David Cameron said the intelligence services and the police were exploring whether it was “right and possible” to cut off those plotting violence.
Even though he’s a PR man by trade and a bit of an empty suit (but I repeat myself), I never thought Cameron would be so ungrounded in the fundamentals of Western liberty that he would pick up an editorial in the People’s Daily and say to himself, “You know, I think these Chinese Communists may be on to something here…”
Stupid is at its most dangerous when the nitwit believes he’s brilliant.
Washington, D.C. is full of such people these days (as are so many other centers of elite power).
And Bret Stephens makes a persuasive case that the infestation reaches all the way to the very top.
Lord, deliver us from our betters…
Thank you for hosting a wonderful, lovely, Eucharistic Congress, and for just generally being a fantastic Archdiocese. Since your humble Blog Goliard has not had the occasion to offer such praise in this space before, let that be said at the outset.
Now that it has been said, yours truly has a bone to pick with you.
One of the Archdiocese’s official Twitter updates today reads as follows:
We are relieved to learn a federal judge has temporarily blocked parts of GA’s HB87. Vote 4 comprehensive Immigration! http://t.co/GHA8BTs
This pushes several of your humble Blog Goliard’s buttons.
So it’s now official Catholic teaching that governments may not enforce immigration laws, and that violating those laws must not be investigated and prosecuted?
And it’s the official position of the Archdiocese that the principles of subsidiarity and democratic governance can be thrown out the window, so long as the unelected lawyers in Federal robes are voiding only those legitimately enacted laws of our state government that we personally dislike?
“Social justice” is not the exclusive property of the open-borders crowd, and is not synonymous with “what liberal Democrats believe” (however much it may have been made to appear otherwise over the past forty-plus years). Catholics may legitimately disagree on many political issues, even when the peace and justice crowd would very much prefer to pretend otherwise. Issues—for instance—such as whom we should allow to enter the United States, and what to do about those already illegally here.
Neither the legal nor the political aspects of this dispute are within the Archdiocese’s areas of competence or authority. The Archdiocese should stick to those things that are.
I very much hope that Mr. Gingrich’s story of personal maturation and redemption is true. I rejoice that he is now a fellow convert to the Catholic faith, and pray that he shall benefit from limitless graces.
I recognize that Mr. Gingrich is a brilliant man, and hope that his ever-bubbling cauldron of fresh ideas and unique insights will always be readily available to Republicans as they deliberate over their governing agenda.
All this notwithstanding, I still believe that the former Speaker has forever forfeited his right to be considered for high office (and not merely on moral grounds), and find it perplexing that anyone is seriously considering running him for President next year. Even in the uninspired 2012 field as it now stands, we can do much better.
You’ve had your chance, and your time has come and gone. Kindly stand aside, sir.
Your humble Blog Goliard has taken some time to tardily commit his thoughts on the Libyan situation to paper (er…okay, to electrons); and it has been a bit of a struggle to reconcile an “I told you so” tone with the whole practicing-humility aspect of Lent.
That would be because it has been clear to this observer, since the day the Arab League called for action against Libya (said action to be taken by others for them, of course) that a heel turn was coming. Recent news reports indicate that this turn—from inciting the intervention in Libya to opposing and undermining it—is already underway. It may be coming a skosh sooner than some might have guessed; but in no other sense does any politically-aware grownup has any excuse to be surprised by this.
Why would the members of the Arab League have chosen to call upon us, and wait passively for us to act, if they were so deeply concerned for the well-being of their Libyan brethren? Have they not planes and ships and tanks of their own? (Of course they do. We sold these things to them ourselves.) Are they not capable of striking against their enemies without the assistance, or even approval, of anyone outside their circle? (Of course they are. Just ask Israel.)
But they are not lifting a finger militarily, and have no intention of doing so, because the fate of Libya’s “rebels” is a secondary consideration…one is even tempted to call it a pretext. Instead, foremost in their minds is the glorious opportunity they have been given to draw the United States and its allies into a trap. (Cue Admiral Akbar.)
Once the cruise missiles and bombs started falling, it was inevitable that a large enough share of them would come directly from U.S. aircraft and ships that it wouldn’t matter to the Arab world how many of our allies were also involved, or even technically “leading” operations. The average person in the Arab world would see this as a Yankee military action, full stop, and any and all collateral damage would be charged entirely to Uncle Sam’s account.
It was inevitable that such damage would ensue…and even more inevitable that Qaddafi’s goons would work to both maximize real collateral damage (you think his Tripoli compounds became crowded with civilians by happenstance?) and spin fanciful tales of invented carnage for the eager consumption of the Arab street.
Which would be all the Arab League would need to start their turn. “Yes, we called for a no-fly zone, but we didn’t mean for them to do this” is their opening line, but it is just the start. It won’t take long before they join Qaddafi and Putin (!) in baying about infidel crusaders spilling Muslim blood.
Here’s what we should have done, in your humble Blog Goliard’s opinion. When the Arab League called for action, we ought to have applauded them, and offered to rearm, refuel, and repair any of their fighter jets employed in the fight against Qaddafi, free of charge, at any airbase of ours or theirs they might find it expedient to use.
We would then have needed to set our diplomats to work crafting appropriately unctuous and rueful statements for release in the coming days and weeks, expressing our deep regret that the Arab League never took us up on our offer, and instead sat on their keisters while the people of Benghazi who are so dear to their hearts faced terror and massacre…which we join them in deploring in the strongest possible terms.
But no. That would require us both to correctly identify and to fully understand our enemies. It would also require us to be able to think at least two or three moves ahead. (Though right now, I’d be grateful for signs that they were thinking even one move ahead. Doesn’t anybody up there in D.C. know how to play this game?)
P.S. Looking forward now, here’s a question yours truly hasn’t seen asked yet. Let’s say we luck out, and the allied air campaign does soon lead to the complete triumph of the “rebels” in Libya. Suppose also that this victory leads to vicious reprisals (as victories of irregular forces tend to do) against Qaddafi’s supporters, collaborators, suspected supporters and collaborators, and also the odd innocent Tripolean or two…or hundred…or thousand. Do we then resume our air campaign, this time against Qaddafi’s vanquishers? And to whom will we then be able to look, to help us get rid of them?
The good folks at NRO’s Phi Beta Cons have taken notice of some of the problems in legal education, and today they link to a piece in the Washington Examiner where a Harvard Law grad (natch) argues for abolishing law schools…or, more realistically, for making them optional.
NRO’s George Leef comments, “Law school is a high barrier to entry that does not ensure competence, but simply drives way up the cost of entering the legal profession.”
Fair enough. Your humble Blog Goliard agrees that much of law school is pointless, and that reforms are badly needed.
But is it really a good idea to be reducing barriers to entry to a profession that is already way, way, way, way, way, way, way oversupplied with people?
The bottom line is, it is at once way too easy, and way too expensive, to become a licensed attorney. We need to raise the barriers, while at the same time making them more cost-efficient and also more tightly bound to actual competence to practice law.
My dream proposal would be the following:
- 1) State bars shall no longer give any weight to ABA accreditation of law schools.
- 2) Nor shall they, nor anyone else, give any consideration to US News rankings. Anyone who knows anything has known for a long time now that the whole business is fraudulent. Kill the rankings now…kill them with fire!
- 3) The one-year law school model—which maverick schools were already pioneering, before the dead hand of the ABA started weighing down innovation and diversity in methods and approaches—shall be revived, even by some well-established institutions.
- 4) State bars shall admit individuals to the bar exam upon the presentation of:
- a) A diploma from any law school that the bar, in its sole discretion, considers acceptable. The bar could maintain a list of schools considered acceptable in all cases; a list of schools considered unacceptable in all cases (and be bold about it! if a school’s bar passage rates have stunk for years, put them on this list!); and then allow a graduate of absolutely any other institution anywhere to petition individually to have his or her degree accepted.
- b) A certificate of completion from a reputable bar-preparation company. As with the previous item, I would suggest keeping a continually-updated list of acceptable and unacceptable firms.
- c) Proof of a certain amount of time spent as an apprentice, clerk, intern, or paralegal, accompanied by the endorsement of one of a select number of longtime members of the bar, to whom will be appointed the task of evaluating lawyers-in-training and their readiness to take the bar exam and enter practice.
Today is the 90th anniversary of the Nineteenth Amendment.
It is an occasion for your humble Blog Goliard to remark upon two things.
First, he would like to remind the rest of America (especially those who love to look down their noses at the rubes out in flyover country…even if they’re not entirely sure where Idaho or Iowa are, or even if they’re the same state or not) that we in the Mountain West were way ahead of you here.
Second, he would like to reiterate his main point from two posts prior (The Obsolescence of Article V). If it required a Constitutional Amendment to extend the voting franchise to women (or to extend it to 18-year-olds, or to end the poll tax), then it should absolutely require an Amendment for the Federal government to require states to expand or modify the scope and terms of marriage, or even to enshrine marriage in civil law in the first place.
This is stated so broadly because this is not a point that pertains only to same-sex unions. If the Federal government wishes to create same-sex unions, or legalize polygamy, or establish uniform national standards for age of consent or consanguinity, or compel states to either grant or deny annulments and divorces under certain circumstances, or anything else of the kind, it may only do so if the States relinquish to the Federal government the general police powers reserved to them under our system of government (see Amendment X).
And the only legitimate way to do that is to pass a Constitutional Amendment.
Tony Blair, the former Prime Minister, has announced that he will be donating his £4.6 million advance and all royalties from his memoir to a charity for injured British servicemen.
In response to this news, many of of our British cousins seem to be blowing a gasket. They howl in the tabloids and on social media about grievances real (underfunding and underequipping the troops) and imagined (the “lied us into” an “illegal” war canard) and everything in between. It’s as if they are opposed to this donation as a matter of principle—as if it were inseparable from everything they hated about his premiership, and because of that malum in se.
These are probably some of the same people who always insisted that Mother Teresa should have refused donations from the likes of Zaïre’s Mobutu…presumably she ought to have insisted that the money remain in his Swiss bank accounts, or be used to buy another armored Mercedes, instead. I am quite comfortable taking Blessed Teresa’s side of that argument. Similarly, in this context I don’t really care how much people may hate Tony Blair, or even how good their reasons may be for doing so. The man is giving a pile of money, which he earned and would be perfectly free to keep, to a good cause. Applaud that today; resume the Two Minutes Hate tomorrow.
Unless, of course, it just drives you too crazy to see someone whom you find repulsive turn around and do something good. If a bad man doing good (assuming arguendo that Blair is bad to the core) is such a grave violation of your categories that it outweighs the good the donation will do, then by all means continue to blow and rage and howl. You might just help keep something like it from happening in future…and then won’t you be so proud?
Your humble Blog Goliard was disappointed, but not surprised, by the utterly lawless decision issued last week in Perry v. Schwarzenegger. Plenty of people have had plenty to say about it in reaction, and there’s little need to add to it here. One thing that does strike one, however, is how much things have changed since 1971, when the 26th Amendment was ratified.
The marriage of same-sex couples is a notion which virtually every human being who has ever lived up until about five minutes ago—including the vast majority of homosexuals up until about fifteen minutes ago—regarded as an absurd impossibility, on the exceedingly rare occasions they had cause to regard the idea at all. If it is possible for courts to now rule that the Constitution affirmatively requires the states, God knoweth how, to marry same-sex couples, then how many of the post-Bill of Rights Amendments would today’s politicians (both the ones in Congress, and the ones wearing robes) have found necessary and bothered to enact?
- 13th: Slavery is self-evidently evil. If that can’t be declared unconstitutional based on Kennedyesque meditations on the nature of liberty and the sheer wrongness of a particular violation of it, then nothing can.
- 15th, 19th, 24th, 26th: No contemporary court would need an explicit Constitutional remit to determine that universal adult suffrage was essential to American (and even global) principles of democracy, or to order Federal and state governments to implement it.
- 18th, 21st: In a world where Wickard v. Filburn is good law, it seems flat-out bizarre that Amendments were thought needed to enable Congress to ban, un-ban, or otherwise regulate a controlled substance. Heck, with the latitude Federal agencies have nowadays (see the EPA’s CO2 power grab), it’s quaint even to think that a specific statute like the Volstead Act would be strictly necessary today.
- 16th: If the Warren Court was able to abolish the death penalty despite explicit reference to capital crimes in the Constitution (cf. Amendment V), then I’d give at least even money that today’s courts would let Congress enact an income tax by simple statute despite what is written in Art. I Sec. 9.
- 23rd: Plenty of people on Capitol Hill seem to be perfectly okay with the idea of giving D.C. seats in Congress without an Amendment. Why wouldn’t that also hold true for allocating it electoral votes?
Note also the quaint final Section added to many of these Amendments: “The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.” Yeah, like Congress has needed, or cared about, express grants of powers these past 70 years or so…
It’s another interesting and frustrating election night for Blog Goliard—his state of residence has that pesky runoff system—and so he’s given to meditating once again on the wisdom/foolishness/randomness/inscrutability of the American electorate.
In recent times there have been plenty of rumblings of everything from tea tempests to crypto-revolution. But this election night, plenty of the usual skeevy and mediocre and crooked and dumb characters are managing to crawl home to victory like they always do. As a whole, American voters may indeed be fed up and angry and frustrated. But they’re not yet fully awake either.
As I’ve long said: we’ll know the voters are finally serious when name recognition becomes a bad thing. Until then, expect pretty much more of the same.
In the meantime, your humble Blog Goliard is expanding his existing pledge to cast no ballot, for the foreseeable future, in favor of any incumbent Congresscritter who has already served at least one full term. This pledge shall now encompass all statewide offices as well. May he meekly suggest that you, gentle reader, think seriously about doing likewise? (Or are you content with the officeholders you’ve got now?)

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